ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -- Bobby Ryan took the long skate back tothe bench after his penalty led to a power-play goal against theAnaheim Ducks.

Scoring the tying goal en route to the Ducks' 4-2 victory overthe St. Louis Blues on Sunday night made the bad feelingsdisappear quickly.

Ryan was serving a tripping penalty for upending Roman Polak inthe third period when Patrik Berglund scored 24 seconds into thepower play to give the Blues the lead.

But Ryan responded 1:30 later to tie it, and Corey Perry scoredtwice to extend Anaheim's home-winning streak to 11 games -tying a franchise record.

"When you're sitting over there and you're helpless and youcan't really do anything about it, then you have that long skateacross the ice when they score, it's the worst feeling inhockey," Ryan said. "I think the entire bench thought it wasprobably one of the worst calls that's happened to us this year.I took it personally and I felt I needed to redeem myself.

"It's nice how things went after that."

Ryan got the equalizer when he jumped on a loose puck in frontand whipped his eighth goal of the season past Jaroslav Halak.Francois Beauchemin earned one of his three assists on the goal,taking a long slap shot that bounced off Ducks captain RyanGetzlaf's backside.

"It was the best pass I made all night, I think," Getzlaf said.

Ryan did his best impersonation of Alex Ovechkin after the goal,skating past the net and leaping against the glass in jubilationwhile the sellout crowd went wild.

"There was a lot of emotion there," said Ryan, who tied a careerbest with a seven-game point streak. "I think the penalty fueledthat a little bit. I was really fired up and had a lot ofenergy."

Perry scored the go-ahead goal with 14:40 left before adding anempty-netter in the final minute, and Jonas Hiller made 14 ofhis 29 saves in the second period.

Andrew Cogliano had a short-handed goal, helping the Ducksimprove the NHL's second-best record to 18-3-3. Anaheim, 15-2-2in its last 19 games, hasn't lost at home since the openeragainst Vancouver.

"We're going out every night and playing the same type ofhockey, whether we're on the road or at home," Getzlaf said."We're just trying to stay consistent throughout the wholeseason."

Polak was off for tripping Saku Koivu when Perry parked himselfat the right of the crease, and Getzlaf's screened wrist shotfrom the top of the right circle glanced off him and past Halakfor a 3-2 lead - his fifth game-winner this season.

"It feels good," Perry said. "Everybody here knows what's goingon and the role they're supposed to be playing, and everyone isadapting to it. We're staying positive when we get down ingames, whether it's early - or like tonight, in the thirdperiod.

"We find a way to win."

In a game featuring teams that came in with the NHL's top twopower-play units, the league-leading Ducks were 1 for 7. St.Louis was 1 for 3 and surrendered a short-handed goal for thefourth time this season.

Shortly after coming up empty on a two-man advantage, the Duckstied it 1-1 at 8:24 of the second period with a power-play goal.

"That's a tired team," Ryan said. "At times we were five feetaway, and at other times we were in the right spot but justcouldn't really get a hold of anything. But if you continue tostick to it, it'll eventually come around."

Coming off consecutive shutout wins for the fifth time infranchise history, the Ducks fell behind 1-0 at 6:09 of thefirst when Reaves redirected Wade Redden's wrist shot from theleft point past Hiller's stick for his first of the season.

Redden's assist was the fourth point in 15 games for thetwo-time All-Star defenseman.

"When we get a 2-1 lead in the third, we expect to win. And whenwe don't, these are the ones we shake our head at," Bluescaptain David Backes said. "I don't think fatigue or playingyesterday is an excuse. I think if anything, we were more readyfor this game than usual.

"We got a one-goal lead in the third on a power play. Those arethe times when you buckle down, and you can't take your foot offthe gas."

NOTES: The Ducks have never posted three straight shutouts inthe regular season, but did it in the 2006 playoffs. ... Anaheimhad an 11-game home winning streak in the 2009-10 season. ...Free agent C Jason Arnott, who has been skating with the Bluesthis week, will find out Monday whether he will be signed.Arnott last played in the NHL on April 30 with the Blues in thesecond game of the Western Conference semifinals. ... The Bluesare 3 for 29 on the power play in their last 11 games. ... TheDucks are 8-0 against Central Division teams. ... Anaheim C NickBonino was dressed for the game, but didn't play because of theflu. RW Kyle Palmieri missed his fourth straight game because ofan upper body injury. ... Blues LW Andy McDonald missed hisseventh game because of an injured left knee. He sat out 51games last season due to a concussion.

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